RECONSTRUCTION OF HISTORICAL JEWELLERY AND ITS SYMMETRY
WITH THE CONTEMPORARY DOCUMENT
ROBERT BAINES Name: Robert Baines, Artist/Goldsmith, (b. Melbourne, Vic. Australia, 1949). Address: School of Art and Culture, RMIT University, 124 Latrobe Street, Melbourne, Vic.3000, Australia. E-mail: robert.baines@rmit.edu.au Fields of interest: Goldsmithing, archaeometallurgy, fine art. Awards: Winston Churchill Fellowship, 1979; Australia Council Fellowship, 1992; Senior Fulbright Fellowship, 1996; Cicely and Colin Rigg Craft Award, 1997; Seppelt Contemporary Art Award, 1998; Andrew Mellon Fellowship, 1999. Publications and/or Exhibitions: Baines, R. G. (1992) The significance of double row granulation from Palestrina, Jewellery Studies, No. 5. Baines, R. G. (1993) Technical decisions in the gold cylinders from Praeneste, In: Outils et Ateliers D'Orfevres 500-1600 AD, Saint-Germain-en-Laye: Musee des Antiquites, 39-44. Baines, R. G. (1993) Technical antecedents of early Hellenistic disc and pendant ear ornaments, In: Williams, D., The Art of the Greek Goldsmith, London: British Museum, 122-126. Exhibition (1997) The Intervention of Red, Part 3 of AAA…....REDEVENT, Munich: Galerie Biró. Exhibition (2000) REDEVENT: Bloodier than black, Philadelphia: Helen Drutt. Exhibition (2000) Bloodier than Black, Munich:
Galerie Biró.
Abstract: Jewellery is not only adornment but also
a cultural, archaeological and technological document. Technology applied
by the ancient goldsmith leaves characteristic traces investigated by archaeometallurgy.
Historical jewellery can be analyzed and copies constructed based on the
known technology of the era. This tests the assumptions and theoretical
strategies of working by the historical goldsmith and the findings of new
knowledge become available to the contemporary goldsmith. This symmetry
results in laboratory test pieces that are artifact and available for reworking
to convey both a contemporary visual relevance and a restatement of history.
Man can arbitrarily do the shaping of metal on a large scale, but on a very fine scale the goldsmith has little latitude. On the scale just visible to our senses makers have generally striven for balance and harmony and the complex gold works under discussion in this paper with their complex granulation and wireworks brilliantly exemplify this. Under close examination, the minute effects due to the
gold and heat are seen to be just as dependent upon the relations between
parts and wholes as the aesthetic quality of the entire work on the scale
at which they are intended to be viewed. In this harmony both are ultimately
structural, but the relevant structure of the gold is on a scale that is
not resolved by the naked eye, or only marginally so. It may be a structure
on a microcrystalline level as in the texture of metal.
1 VISIBLE SIGNS OF INNER THINKING A main theme of this work is that the application of technology and experience with the properties of gold is part of human history alongside other cultural statements of politics, society, ideas and art. Jewellery is the capsule, the document that holds these things Although it is not possible to take readings of fingerprints from the gold works under discussion it is possible to see and identify outward marks which mirror the (inner) thinking of the makers. Mental planning and jotting is evident in some works. In some cases these are purposefully applied with the expectancy that in a later sequence the process will erase or cover over any such indication. On other occasions such preliminary markings in a later sequence provide a facility for the addition of further construction, for example a scribed line becomes a location for a row of granules. Almost nothing has been written of these expressions of preliminary design thinking. They have been generally overlooked or disregarded, but signage of planning and designing can identify them as the visible working out of an idea. This offers a window into the design thinking or strategies of the maker identifying methodologies that are principally invisible. In particular ancient gold jewellery the decorative configurations
that accumulatively mark their style can also be regarded as a consequence
of technology. Their placement and relationship to each other is in part
a testimony to the joining technology carried out by the goldsmith.
2 OBSERVING THE TECHNOLOGY OF STYLE Jewellery artifacts are selected that appear to confirm
this argument, and by observing them through the microscope working drawings
are constructed. Series of drawings of selected artifacts develop the method
and strategies of analysis and can also depict possible sequence of assemblage
of the gold jewellery. The detailed drawings of surfaces and structures
describe the geography of the jewellery and these are used as maps while
in the chamber of the Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM). The drawn maps
facilitate an orienteering through the complex jewellery landscape. The
drawings highlight locations and areas of interest for observation and
analysis. The SEM identifies manufacturing idiosyncrasies and attains surface
and sub surface analyses of alloys using energy-dispersive x-ray fluorescence
spectrometer (EDS). Elemental analyses of artifacts and samples offer readings
of surface and subsurface alloys. SEM imaging of markings and structures
indicating manufacture of the decorative components is observed and photographed
and this visual information can reveal sequence of assemblage and identify
gold-working methods.
3 HISTORICAL LOCATION OF TECHNOLOGY The SEM provides detailed examination imaging and high quality photography with clear depth of field resolution. This allows for identifying and recording characteristics of manufacture; the sequential mode of assembly of the various components, characterizing of wires can be attained and the observing of granulation with its diverse configurations and possibilities of joining are accurately recorded. The first objective in such methodology is to articulate metal analysis and define its contextual meaning with regard to the period of gold technology in the historic sequence. The second objective is to identify worked surfaces and structures and place them in a technological and chronological context. Such evidence can also develop theories of the source and location of manufacture. Generally the mode of joining by the goldsmith can be identified first by visual inspection, for observation of contact points reveal the characteristics of particular heat systems of fusion. However visual perception can quite often be misleading. Metal surfaces can vary considerably according to diverse combinations of heat, atmosphere and chemical contexts. More comprehensively, comparing the joined core can make identification by qualitative analysis with the substance of the joining material using EDS. Finally, scanning electron micrographs of cross sections can be compared with the surface and the core material of heat joined regions. This qualitative analysis and comparison of regions using the EDS clearly shows the application of copper in the diffusion bonding system. Further to this can now be added in some instances the observation of stylistic configurations of gold works. The identifying of stylistic configurations and recording
of workers idiosyncrasies has been part of ongoing research. This has enabled
the author to group previously unlinked work as having same source of manufacture.
This acquired knowledge also provides a vantage to authenticate ancient
goldworks and the placing of those artifacts in their chronological location.
Fakes having same stylistic mistakes might suggest a same source of manufacture.
Style and technology have their own chronological and cultural location and their combinations have their variance
affected by social and geographic eccentricities.
4 ASYMMETRICAL DEVELOPMENTS FROM HISTORICAL METALWORK. Jewellery offers a view into history of cultural descriptions
in stylistic, chemical and methodological correctness. The data identified
becomes the basis for authentication for curators/conservators/ jewellery
historians. For diagnostic purposes there is the expectation of an archaeological
correctness within the fabric and manufacture of the jewellery document. From the
vantage-point of a contemporary goldsmith, this
has provided the author a basis for applying contemporary jewellery forms
and these as inclusions become a stumbling block and an upheaval within
orthodox classification. There is in this dissymetry an intervention with
contemporary ephemeral materials into the jewellery artifact that has a
diagnosed historic correctness by the orthodox classifier. Substances of
glass, plastic, foil, paint and found objects become a confrontation and
a vehicle for colour and this disharmony offers new vantages for signage
of an interfered history.
5 THE INTERVENTION OF RED The symmetry of the orthodox paradigm is upset by the intrusion / inclusion / intervention of the colour red and furthermore by the possibility of its substance. The Intervention of Red is the body of jewellery by the author that offers a viewing into cultural descriptions of history. Jewellery pieces have their own historical/cultural location, possessing a style, which is in accord with its chemical and methodological basis. Each work is "authenticated" by its stylistic and material data. The archaeological "correctness" is upset in The Intervention of Red by the impediment of red, and furthermore by the possibility of its substance. The material condition of red is not located within any historical period. The substance of red has no specificity. Remnant materials and found objects becomes vehicle for colour and becomes a confrontation, an intrusion and physically distorts the previously historically correct jewellery document. In the new dissymetry a perceived genre or style is challenged. A pseudo history this is not and neither is it the formulating of a new myth, but it does ask the question what if? There is a new instruction of what if. The invasive red changes the form of the object as it contorts in order to house the red. With the implant comes exaggeration. Is this the invention of a new tradition or merely the instruction of what if? The history remains, unchanged, but played with. It is a confrontation of what is initially alien, which then leads to an accommodation, bringing a new configuration and harmony. A rearrangement with changed structures occurs in order to comply with what was once an impediment. Surviving history becomes a vehicle for the contemporary planting of a new ideal from another time, and this places the past within the reach of a vicarious now. In the new symmetry the history remains, unchanged, but played with. Making jewellery is expansive, and ‘to make it new’ does not mean to erase the past, but to transport the work of the past into the present. The jewellery object generates symmetry with historical objects through an assymmetrical approach.
This collection of work was partly built during a Senior
Fulbright research project at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York
during 1997. A second Senior Fellowship under a Mellon research project
was conducted in 2000 at the Metropolitan Museum.
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